GENERAL DESCRIPTION
This portrait is a memorial to Philip Evergood's mother, Flora, who died on March 10, 1927, shortly after her son began this portrait. As he later remembered, "My mother was dying of cancer in a little room on Lexington Avenue. I was sitting talking to her in the window, and I looked at her face and I said, 'Mother, I've never seen anyone with such beautiful eyes....I'd like to paint you.' So she walked over to her little couch-bed, lay down, and crossed her hands over the pain, as she often did, and I got out my paints and went to work."
Evergood completed the face and hair before his mother's death. Over the next nineteen years, while he became an important—and sometimes controversial—social protest artist, he completed it, adding the high-heeled shoes Flora Evergood enjoyed wearing.
Excerpt from
William Keyse Rudolph, DMA label text, 2005.
NOTES
Created 1927-1946
Object File Reviewed
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Evergood, Philip (American, 1901-1973)
Cultures
Geography
Place of origin: New York (New York/United States): TGN: 7007567
Process/materials
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
From 1963: Dallas Museum for Contemporary Arts, Foundation for the Arts Collection, gift of Marvin Small [1]
From 1963: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Foundation for the Arts Collection, transferred from the above, May 30, 1963 [2][3]
[1] Pursuant to the April 19, 1963 Agreement of Merger between the Dallas Association and the Dallas Museum for Contemporary Arts (DMCA), the collection of the Dallas Museum for Contemporary Arts was transferred to the Foundation for the Arts.
[2] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.
[3] The Foundation for the Arts is a non-profit corporation created as a title-holding entity to serve the people of Dallas but to operate independently of the City. The Dallas Museum of Art (at its own cost) is responsible for the care, storage, insurance, conservation and maintenance of the collection, and agrees to maintain the highest museum standards in the management and handling of the Foundation's collection. The title to all works of art purchased or otherwise acquired by the Foundation for the Arts is retained by the Foundation.
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
IMAGE ASSETS
WEB RESOURCES
- Philip Evergood, Biography~Learn more about the artist at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
ARCHIVAL RESOURCES
FUN FACTS
TEACHING IDEAS
RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1963.56.FA
Category
rules_operator
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General Description
This portrait is a memorial to Philip Evergood's mother, Flora, who died on March 10, 1927, shortly after her son began this portrait. As he later remembered, "My mother was dying of cancer in a little room on Lexington Avenue. I was sitting talking to her in the window, and I looked at her face and I said, 'Mother, I've never seen anyone with such beautiful eyes....I'd like to paint you.' So she walked over to her little couch-bed, lay down, and crossed her hands over the pain, as she often did, and I got out my paints and went to work."
Evergood completed the face and hair before his mother's death. Over the next nineteen years, while he became an important—and sometimes controversial—social protest artist, he completed it, adding the high-heeled shoes Flora Evergood enjoyed wearing.
Excerpt from
William Keyse Rudolph, DMA label text, 2005.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Notes
Created 1927-1946
Object File Reviewed
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Evergood, Philip (American, 1901-1973)
Cultures
Geography
Place of origin: New York (New York/United States): TGN: 7007567
Process/materials
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
From 1963: Dallas Museum for Contemporary Arts, Foundation for the Arts Collection, gift of Marvin Small [1]
From 1963: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Foundation for the Arts Collection, transferred from the above, May 30, 1963 [2][3]
[1] Pursuant to the April 19, 1963 Agreement of Merger between the Dallas Association and the Dallas Museum for Contemporary Arts (DMCA), the collection of the Dallas Museum for Contemporary Arts was transferred to the Foundation for the Arts.
[2] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.
[3] The Foundation for the Arts is a non-profit corporation created as a title-holding entity to serve the people of Dallas but to operate independently of the City. The Dallas Museum of Art (at its own cost) is responsible for the care, storage, insurance, conservation and maintenance of the collection, and agrees to maintain the highest museum standards in the management and handling of the Foundation's collection. The title to all works of art purchased or otherwise acquired by the Foundation for the Arts is retained by the Foundation.
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
rules
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Objects
number
Equals
1963.56.FA
source file
object_notes_3_a-0476.xml.nores